Thursday, November 29, 2012

The Cat Park - by Nina

Today we went to the Cat Rehabilitation Centre at Emdoneni Lodge.  First we saw the African wildcats.  The African wildcat looks a lot like a normal house cat but it has a shorter tail and its front legs are longer.

the African wildcat looks a lot like a normal house cat


Then we saw the caracals.  Caracals are gold with muscley legs and long ears with tufts f fur on the end to increase hearing.  They are vicious.  My favourite caracal was called Peaches.

Peaches prowling

After that we saw the cheetahs.  We walked through a gate and across a huge enclosure.  Most of the enclosure is covered in long grass but at the back is a clump of canopy trees just like the plains of Africa.  In the canopy trees are two cheetahs just laying there in the shade cooling down.  They were beautiful.  Then the guide told us we could pat them.  He said to come up behind one and pat it.  I wasn’t really very afraid of them because they just looked like big pussy-cats and the guide assured us they were.

a cheetah laying in the shade


it was beautiful!

our guide said we could pat it

last we saw the servals.  When we went into the enclosure our guide pointed 15m up into the trees, and sure enough it was up there.  Then he led us to a cat on the ground.  To go there we had to go under a tree and we had to walk under a serval 10m above us.  The serval on the ground was laying down and it looked very calm.  Our guide said we could pat it.  It was so soft.  He said it was called Jane.

a serval 10m above us

patting Jane

_ _ _

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Hluhluwe (Shoosh-looey) Game Reserve - by Nina

One day we got up at 4:45am and went to the hire car we had hired for three days.  The first day in the car we would go to Hluhluwe.  On the second day we would go to a cat park. On the third day we would go to another game reserve called St Lucia.  Today we were going to Hluhluwe.

A little while in the park we saw some zebra.  They’re beautiful animals.  In Imfolozi Game Reserve Anne told us that zebras used to be all black but they adapted white stripes to balance their body temperature.

Anne told us zebras used to be all black!

Then we saw a troupe of baboons.  The old males look very wise and royal.

I was looking out for animals and I saw a smooth rock in the ground with a trail round it.  Later we found out it was a warthog rubbing post.  A warthog would find a large rock in the ground and would run around it until the rock was smooth or he had no fleas.

Along the road there was a small patch of swamp.  On a dead bush was a tall beautiful crane.  Its throat was brown and it had a white splash under its eye.  We looked in the bird book and saw it was called a darter.

the darter

At the swamp there was also a Malachite kingfisher.  It was beautiful.  Next we saw a Mouse bird.  The name suits it.

We also saw a mummy elephant and a baby.  The baby was very small compared to the mum.


Mummy and baby crossing the track in front of us.

Today was a day for seeing mums and babies.  We saw mums and baby:
  • elephants
  • giraffes
  • impala
  • nyala
  • zebra
  • rhinos
  • warthogs and
  • baboons.

Two more mums and babies

All you could see of the baby warthog was its back and its little tail poking out of the long grass.

The baby giraffe was standing at a distance and at first we thought it was an adult.  Then we saw the body of a giraffe in the trees and realised the first giraffe must be a baby.  Then mum went over and stood just next to the baby.

Giraffes are so graceful.

Here’s a full list of the things we saw:

Birds
Martial eagle
African crowned eagle
Yellow-billed kite
Gray heron
Darter
Yellow-billed stork
Water thick-knee
Crested guineafowl
Egyptian goose
Malachite kingfisher
Blue-cheeked bee-eater
Little bee-eater
Burchells coucal
African hoppoe
Cape turtle-dove
Speckled mousebird
Trumpeter hornbill
Magpie shrike
Scarlet-chested sunbird
Blue waxbill
Green twinspot
Village weaver
Spectacled weaver
Southern red bishop
Cape glossy starling

Mammals
Burchells zebra
giraffe
buffaloe
White rhinoceros
warthog
Chacma baboon
Steenbok
Blue Wildebeest
Nyala

Bugs and Other
flies
dung beetles
millipedes
centipedes

_ _ _

Saturday, November 17, 2012

An Exciting Night – by Gary

After visiting Hluhluwe (Shoosh-looey) Game Reserve we navigate our hire car across the veld to our accommodation for the night; a little backpackers hostel and camping ground at the northern end of the reserve.  Being tired, we quickly up our two tents and install sleeping bags.  Vicki and I in one tent, Zeke and Nina the other.  We slouch off to the kitchen area to scruff some dinner.

The weather is looking sus. Grey clouds heap-up bringing on an early dusk, but being roughty-toughty types we ignore it as best we can.  Refueled we quickly seek haven amidst the feathers.  Soon we are pleasantly beached upon the Land of Nod.  But some hours later our slumbers are brought to a rude end.

The distant roll of thunder warns of an approaching storm – ah, likely it will miss us.  The tent lights up like day and a sharp clap, just seconds later, underscores my wishful thinking.  An instantaneous blinding arc of light and explosion of thunder scares the living daylight out of us all.  ‘You ok next door’,  I yell.  ‘Yep, fine!’  Zeke returns.  Thunder; a great rolling backdrop of noise interleaved with staccato blasts, now makes normal conversation impossible.  The lightening is so continuous I could read a book.  Our tent begins a wild dance as the wind arrives, followed seconds later by rain, light at first but building rapidly to a torrent.  It doesn’t take long before a young voice ‘Dad.... Dad!’ reaches us between thunder blasts. ‘Our tent is starting to drip’.

The minutes slowly tick by, then ‘Dad.... Dad, we are starting to get really wet!’  Action required, but what?  I instruct the kids to get dressed, roll up their sleeping bags and mats, open the tent door and prepare to leap out, running as quickly as possible to the adjacent backpackers bunkhouse. ‘Ready?.... one, two, three...GO!’  Like startled rabbits caught in headlights, or perhaps waterfall disco dancers under a strobe, the three of us streak through the drenching storm.  I fall, skidding wildly on my back in the now ankle deep red mud.  Up again, running madly.  We make it!

In the backpackers, its kind of creepy.  A poorly illuminated hallway.  Wild animals thrusting heads through walls, caught in the act amidst the lightening flashes.  One room has a door ajar and light pours out.  ‘Hello... anybody there?’ I yell.  A young woman answers... warily.  Kids have failed to follow me from the foyer.  So it’s just me, drenched, agitated, standing in her doorway in a rapidly growing puddle.  Gloops of red mud are falling off my body. ‘Are you alone?’ I demand between rasping breaths.  The young woman’s looking ever more scared!  Hmm... wrong question.  I retreat, find kids, herd them in front of me.  Returning I attempt a better explanation.  Could she have my kids for the rest of the night?  Just floor space!  Well behaved!  I’ll come back for them in the morning, promise!  As the explanation slowly grows in plausibility the woman relaxes, even smiles.  ‘Yes no problem’ she finally laughs and I beat a hasty retreat before she changes her mind.

Back out in the storm, another hour or so later it’s all over, but its close, damp and muddy inside the tent.  Everything drips.  Vicki and I finally get to sleep.

Morning time, not the best nights sleep.  Vicki trudges off in search of Zeke and Nina to see how they fared.  Finding our children, they are bizarrely enervated!  They’ve sat up half the rest of the night with this young woman swapping yarns of their lives and travels, punctuated with howls of laughter.  The young woman and the flood refugees have become good friends!  They’ve had a fabulous time!

I took a few photos of the bunkhouse the next morning:

Wild animals...

... thrusting heads through walls, ...

... caught in the act...

... amidst the lightening flashes.

The bar!  We had dripped our way through it... wide open and deserted.

Yep... it’s a genuine elephant’s foot stool.


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Friday, November 16, 2012

Umfolozi Game Reserve – by Nina

One day we got up at 3:30 in the morning and went to the guide we had hired yesterday to go to the Umfolozi Game Reserve.  Our guides name was Anne.

Before we even got in to the park we saw our first bit of wildlife; a hyena.  We were really excited. We had a book with pictures and names of some birds and mammals.  We decided to tick the animals off as we saw them.

Along the road there were loads of Yellow-billed Kites.  They were magnificent. As well as kites there were Helmeted Guinea Fowl.

 a Helmeted Guinea Fowl

Just a little bit from the park entrance we saw two enormous elephants.  We had to wait for them to get past.  A little bit further on we saw a Black Rhino.  This was amazing as Black Rhinos are far more endangered than the White Rhinos and we hadn’t even seen a White Rhino yet.

Then we saw a Hoopoe.  This was a very weird bird.

the very weird Hoopoe bird

We saw some buffalo and Anne told us that they were the most dangerous animals in Africa not even the leopards are more dangerous.

There were loads of zebra and impala everywhere. We saw some wildebeest and impala together and Anne told us that wildebeest, zebra and impala often stay together.

Next we saw giraffe.  They are extremely beautiful and graceful.

giraffes are graceful

We turned down a trail to a river to maybe see some crocodiles, and on the way a Black Rhino charged at us.  It was really creepy.  On the track we saw some Leopard Tortoise.  At the river we saw nothing except a vulture in the distance.

The dung beetles are really cool.  The male dung beetle stands on his front legs and rolls the dung ball with his back legs.  Meanwhile the female sits on the ball and lays her eggs.


male dung beetles do the rolling


We were going down the road and suddenly I saw a Spring Hare.  The Spring Hare is funny because it has a long bushy tail instead of a bobbin tail.

When we were leaving we saw a vulture in a nest with its babies.

Here is a list of what we saw:

Birds
Lappet-faced Vulture
White-backed Vulture
Tawny Eagle
Secretary Bird
Egyptian goose
Helmeted Guinea Fowl
Natal Francolin
Hoopoe
Cape Turtle Dove
Red-billed Hornbill
Crowned Hornbill
Long-tailed Shrike
Red-billed Oxpecker
Paradise Flycatcher
Pin-tailed Whydah
Cape Glossy Starling
Plum-coloured Starling
Spotted-backed Weaver
masked Weaver
Red Bishop

Mammals
African Elephant
Giraffe
White Rhinoceros
Black Rhinoceros
Warthog
Baboon
Hyenas
Buffalo
Black Wildebeest
Nyala
Zebra
Impala
Spring Hare
Slender Mongoose

Reptiles
Leopard Turtle
Terrapin
Iguana

Insects and Others
Flies
Butterflies
Millipedes
Centipedes